V. Conclusion [157] Cloete JA has dealt with the repudiation issue and I agree with his judgment. This means that the appeal has to succeed with costs. Telcordia is in the circumstances of the case entitled to the costs of three counsel during all stages of the proceedings, including the petition for leave to appeal, which Telkom opposed. W. The Order [158] The following order is made:
(a) The appeal is upheld with costs, including those consequent on the employment of three counsel, which shall also be allowed in relation to the different stages of the application for leave to appeal.
(b) The order of the court a quo is set aside and in its stead the following order issues:
‘The application is dismissed with costs, including the costs of three counsel.’
CLOETE JA: [159] The issues which remain for decision in this appeal are whether, as argued by Telkom, the arbitrator, in finding that Telkom had repudiated the Integrated Agreement so entitling Telcordia to cancel it, exceeded his authority or decided a question without evidence, thereby committing a gross irregularity. If this were to be the case, the dismissal of Telkom’s counterclaim would also fall to be set aside. [160] In the section of his award entitled ‘Telcordia’s delivery obligations’ the arbitrator summarised Telcordia’s argument as to its delivery obligations under the Integrated Agreement, and followed with a summary of Telkom’s argument. In each instance, he also dealt with the parties’ respective contentions on repudiation. Reduced to the barest essentials Telcordia’s argument was that its contractual obligations were to be found in the FSDs, whereas Telkom’s argument was that Telcordia’s contractual obligations were to be found in the SOCs. The arbitrator concluded that Telcordia’s case was to be preferred and gave detailed reasons for this conclusion. In the next section of his award, entitled ‘Termination of the Integrated Agreement: Telkom’s Counterclaim’, the arbitrator commenced by saying: ‘102. In their submissions to me both parties proceeded, quite correctly in my view, on the footing that the answer given to the question considered in the previous section of this Award would determine which party’s termination of the Integrated Agreement was justified in law. Since, as I have found, Telcordia’s tender of the December 2000 software release was in accordance with its contractual obligations, it must follow that Telkom’s subsequent refusal to accept delivery of the software, or to go on with the contract, was a repudiation of the Integrated Agreement which Telcordia was entitled to accept as discharging the contract, by its letter dated 12 January 2001. It is clear law that the test for repudiation is an objective one, so that it makes no difference that Telkom may have considered that it was perfectly entitled to act as it did.’119 The arbitrator then said: ‘103. It follows from the above that Telkom’s counterclaim, which depends for its validity on the proposition that the IA [Integrated Agreement] was properly terminated by it in consequence of Telcordia’s breach, must fail.’ Several sections of the award follow, none of which are relevant for present purposes, before the concluding section entitled ‘Formal Award’. The formal award reads in part: ‘1. That the Answer to Question 1.1 in the List of Issues120 to be determined by this Award is that the contractual baseline for determining the specific features and functionality of the software to be delivered by Telcordia to Telkom in each of the various software releases provided for in the IA is the Feature Specification Descriptions (FSDs) applicable to such release. Question 1.2 does not require a separate answer.
2. That the Answer to Question 2.1 in the said List of Issues is that on the true construction of the IA and in the events which happened Telcordia was required to deliver software in June and December 2000 which complied with the FSDs in respect of each of those software releases. Question 2.2 does not require a separate answer, and Question 3, does not arise.
…
4. That by refusing to take delivery of software which complied, in all material respects, with the FSDs applicable to the December 2000 software release Telkom repudiated the IA.
5. That Telkom’s counterclaims are dismissed.’ (Italics added.) It is necessary to emphasise for reasons which will become apparent that at no point prior to this had the arbitrator discussed the question whether the December 2000 (‘12/00’) software release complied with the FSDs applicable to it. All that he had said, in passing, was the following: ‘It is to be noted that Telkom was not contending, and has not subsequently contended, that what was delivered by the December 2000 release was not in compliance with the FSDs . . .’. [161] Telkom submitted that the arbitrator exceeded his powers in making any finding in regard to repudiation, as this was not covered by the May issues. Indeed, Telkom went so far as to say that the arbitrator’s finding was a ‘dramatic development’ as contemplated in those cases in South Africa121and in England122 which hold that it is a gross irregularity for an arbitrator to decide a dispute on a point that has not been put to the parties and on which they have not been heard. It is true that the May issues as originally formulated involved questions of interpretation of the Integrated Agreement and not performance of it. But the deponent to the replying affidavit delivered on behalf of Telkom in these proceedings said unequivocally: ‘I admit that, during the course of the proceedings, the scope and focus of the issues widened and that, at the end of the May hearing, Telkom said that the Arbitrator should decide as many of the issues between the parties as could fairly be determined in the light of oral and documentary evidence presented during May.’ Indeed, by the end of the hearing in 2002, each party had requested the arbitrator to deal with its right to cancel on the basis of the evidence that had been placed before him. Telkom even sought judgment in respect of its counterclaim. The arbitrator’s statement in para 102 of his award (quoted in the previous paragraph of this judgment) that the parties proceeded on the footing that his decision on Telcordia’s delivery obligations would determine which party’s termination of the Integrated Agreement was justified in law, is amply justified by the record. Far from being a ‘dramatic event’, the arbitrator did no more than what the parties had requested him to do. [162] Telkom submitted that the arbitrator had nevertheless exceeded his authority, in that the question whether it had repudiated the Integrated Agreement could not fairly have been determined by the arbitrator on the evidence before him, because it might have been able to justify its conduct ─ which would not then have amounted to a repudiation ─ by showing that the 12/00 software release did not comply with the FSDs. The argument amounts to this: The arbitrator held that it had repudiated the Integrated Agreement by insisting that Telcordia perform in terms of its fallacious interpretation of the contract. But if the software tendered by Telcordia did not comply with the FSDs, that would have entitled it to refuse to receive the software. Therefore if it can establish such non-compliance, its rejection of the software was justified. And if its rejection was justified, it cannot amount to repudiation. The finding by the arbitrator that it had repudiated the Integrated Agreement was therefore premature and he exceeded his powers in making the finding at that stage of the arbitration. It must be borne in mind, as pointed out by Harms JA in para [89] of his judgment that it was within the power of the arbitrator to decide the scope of his mandate. That apart, there are at least three reasons why Telkom’s contention must fail ─ two of fact, and one of law. [163] First, as the arbitrator observed, it was never Telkom’s case, either on the pleadings or during the 2002 hearing, that the 12/00 software release did not comply with the FSDs. Telkom sought in this court to argue the contrary. Its argument is unsustainable. So far as the pleadings are concerned, Telcordia alleged in its statement of claim that Telkom had repudiated the Integrated Agreement inter alia ‘by refusing to take delivery of the December 2000 release notwithstanding that Telcordia tendered delivery of such release in accordance with the Project Plan and that Telkom is obliged to take delivery thereof’. These allegations were simply ‘disputed’ by Telkom in its plea; but that bald denial was wholly inadequate to support a case that Telkom was entitled to reject the software tendered because it did not comply with the FSDs. A defendant who wishes to raise the exceptio non adimpleti contractus on the basis of an incomplete tender must particularise in the plea in what respects performance was defective and will ordinarily have to give evidence on this aspect first (although the overall onus to disprove the existence of the defects will remain on the plaintiff).123 The reason is obvious: a plaintiff cannot be expected to prove a negative where the complaints of the defendant are unknown. Furthermore, when Telcordia requested further particulars from Telkom as to the respects in which Telkom alleged that the software tendered in December 2000 failed to comply with Telcordia’s delivery obligations, Telkom replied that Telcordia should have regard to the SOCs and the fact that the December release was required to contain all features and functionality necessary to achieve Non-Voice Flow-Thru. It was not even suggested that there was any discrepancy between the software tendered and the FSDs. In other words, Telkom’s pleaded case involved a comparison of the FSDs with the SOCs and not a comparison between the software and the requirements of the FSDs. [164] So far as the hearing is concerned, Telkom’s counsel made it clear that Telkom did not follow the acceptance test procedure in respect of the software tendered, which is the procedure for which the Integrated Agreement provides to identify and remedy shortcomings in the software, because it was known that the software contained ‘gaps’ and would accordingly not comply with Telkom’s interpretation of Telcordia’s obligations. Telkom’s counsel at no time suggested that Telkom was entitled to reject the 12/00 software release because it did not comply with the FSDs. [165] The second reason why Telkom’s argument that it could have justified its conduct by showing that the 12/00 software release did not comply with the FSDs must fail, is this. Telcordia was entitled to remedy any shortcomings during the subsequent testing process. The testing process could take place only over a period of time and only within Telkom’s own systems and Telcordia was entitled and obliged through updates to rectify any problems. It was simply not open to Telkom to reject the software release on the basis that it did not comply with the FSDs, because the contract contemplated that this could well be the case and it allowed Telcordia to cure any defects in the software within the time allowed for performance. The corollary to Telcordia’s right is that Telkom was not entitled to refuse to accept the December software when it was tendered even if it did not fully comply with the FSDs ─ it was obliged to receive it and proceed with the testing process. [166] In any event Telkom’s argument is unsound in law. Telkom prayed in aid the falsa causa non nocet principle laid down in cases such as Putco Ltd v TV & Radio Guarantee Co (Pty) Ltd 1985 (4) SA 809 (A) and Datacolor International (Pty) Ltd v Intamarket (Pty) Ltd 2001 (2) SA 284 (SCA). Those cases hold that: ‘Where a party seeks to terminate an agreement and relies upon a wrong reason to do so he is not bound thereby, but is entitled to take advantage of the existence of a justifiable reason for termination, notwithstanding the wrong reason he may have given’.124 But this principle has no application in a case such as the present, where it is the other party who has cancelled the contract. In such a case, the party who repudiated cannot put the clock back and undo the valid cancellation by relying on a ground that he legitimately could have, but did not, advance, in substitution for the ground that he did advance and which resulted in the cancellation of the contract. Once cancelled, the contract is irrevocably at an end. The rule exists for the protection of an innocent party and does not enure to the benefit of a party guilty of a breach of contract: it does not entitle the latter to claim that, since it could have done something similar without breaching the contract, its breach had no adverse legal consequences. [167] Finally, Telkom submitted that the italicised part of para 4 of the arbitrator’s award (quoted in para [160] above) constituted a finding that the 12/00 software release in fact complied with the FSDs applicable to it; and that as there had been no evidence on this point, the arbitrator’s finding that it had repudiated the Integrated Agreement fell to be set aside on review. Paragraph 4 of the award must, however, be read in context. The fundamental issue between the parties was, as I have said, whether Telcordia’s contractual obligations were to be determined with reference to the FSDs (Telcordia’s case) or the SOCs (Telkom’s case). The arbitrator, in his detailed reasons which preceded the formal award, decided this issue in favour of Telcordia and embodied that decision in paras 1 and 2 of his formal award (also quoted in para [160] above). Once he had made this decision, and since it was not pleaded or argued by Telkom that the 12/00 software release did not in fact comply with the FSDs (as the arbitrator expressly noted), it followed that Telkom’s rejection of the 12/00 software release was a repudiation of the Integrated Agreement. That was the finding embodied in para 4 of the arbitrator’s formal award. In that paragraph the arbitrator did not intend additionally to decide that the December software release as a matter of fact accorded with the FSDs nor must that paragraph be interpreted as embodying such a finding; the arbitrator clearly intended merely to articulate the conclusion already reached by him, namely, that Telkom had repudiated the Integrated Agreement by rejecting software developed in accordance with the FSDs (as opposed to the SOCs). In the absence of a challenge by Telkom that the software did not in fact comply with the FSDs, it is not surprising that the arbitrator expressed himself as he did. If Telkom subsequently seeks to make out a case, in relation to the remaining issues relating to quantum not decided by the arbitrator’s interim award, that the 12/00 software release did not comply in fact with the FSDs applicable to it, it is entitled to do so ─ but its right to do so does not affect in any way the arbitrator’s conclusion that it repudiated the Integrated Agreement. [168] I therefore conclude that Telkom’s attack on the arbitrator’s finding that it repudiated the Integrated Agreement, is without merit. It follows that the arbitrator’s dismissal of Telkom’s counterclaim must stand. On the other issues raised in the appeal I respectfully agree with the reasoning and conclusions reached by Harms JA, and concur in the order made.
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T D CLOETE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Concur: Conradie JA
Lewis JA
Ponnan JA
1 See the article series by RH Christie beginning with ‘Arbitration: Party Autonomy or Curial Intervention: The Historical Background’ (1994) 111 SALJ 143. CBI NZ Ltd v Badger Chiyoda [1989] 2 NZR 669.
2 Eg Dutch Reformed Church v Town Council of Cape Town (1898) 15 SC 14 at 21; Dickenson & Brown v Fisher’s Executors 1915 AD 166 at 174; Amalgamated Clothing & Textile Workers Union of SA v Veldspun (Pty) Ltd 1994 (1) SA 162 (A). The Roman Dutch approach mentioned in Theron v Ring van Wellington van die NG Sendingkerk in SA 1976 (2) SA 1 (A) is of historical interest only.
3 United Mexican States v Feldman Karpa 2005 CanLII 249 (ON CA) para 37. For the current English approach: Lesotho Highlands Development Authority v Impregilo SpA [2005] UKHL 43. The New Zealand approach is set out in Trustees of Rotoaira Trust v Attorney-General [1998] 3 NZLR 89 (HC) at 101-102.
4 Mitsubishi Motors Corporation v Soler Chrysler-Plymouth Inc 473 50 US 614 (1985) per Blackmum J at 629.
5 Re The International Commercial Arbitration Act, SBC (Quintette Coal Ltd v Nippon Steel Corp) 1986, C. 14, 1990 CanLII 304 (BC SC)quoted in United Mexican States at para 36. A special deference approach does not arise on the facts of this case. It should be noted that South Africa has not adopted the 1985 UNCITRAL Model Law, which strictly limits the involvement of courts in the arbitral process.
6 Mitsubishi Motors Corporation v Soler Chrysler-Plymouth Inc supra.
7 SA Sentrale Ko-op Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shifren 1964 (4) SA 760 (A).
8 2002 (4) SA 1 (SCA).
9 Emphasis in the original.
10 1954 (3) SA 932 (O).
11 The arbitrator found that no such variations had taken place.
12 ‘9.2 Contractual Delivery Date
9.2.1 The Contractual Delivery Dates specified in the Project Plan are of the utmost importance. Non-compliance with said dates will constitute a material breach of this Agreement. Partial delivery will not constitute Delivery.
9.2.2 The Licenced Software will be delivered in accordance with this Agreement and the Project Plan set forth as Exhibit F to the Integrated Agreement. The true intention and meaning of this Agreement is that the SUPPLIER will, in all respects, supply, deliver, install, commission, render and complete the Licenced Software in a workman-like manner to the satisfaction of TELKOM as mutually agreed in the Proposal and the acceptance criteria mutually agreed upon by the Parties.’
13 It is not necessary to quote paras 4 and 5.
14 Uniform r 53.
15 The allegation relating to bias and partiality was also linked to the common law but nothing turns on this.
16 A phrase used by Wade and Forsyth Administrative Law 8 ed at 270.
17 Du Toit v Minister of Transport 2006 (1) SA 297 (CC) at para 29.
18 Total Support Management (Pty) Ltd v Diversified Health Systems (SA) (Pty) Ltd 2002 (4) SA 661 (SCA).
19 Cf Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of SA: In re Ex parte President of the RSA 2000 (3) BCLR 241, 2000 (2) SA 674 (CC) para 45: ‘Whilst there is no bright line between public and private law, administrative law, which forms the core of public law, occupies a special place in our jurisprudence. It is an incident of the separation of powers under which courts regulate and control the exercise of public power by the other branches of government. It is built on constitutional principles which define the authority of each branch of government, their interrelation ship and the boundaries between them.’
20 The position with statutory arbitrations is different: Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd v CCMA [2006] 115 (RSA).
21 Suovaniemi v Finland ECHR case no 31737/96 (23 Feb 1999).
22 [2006] 2 All SA 469 (SCA). See also Marlin v Durban Turf Club 1942 AD 112 at 130 in fine.
23 2002 (4) SA 1 (SCA) para 94 and 95.
24 First Options of Chicago Inc v Kaplan 115 S Ct 1920; 514 US 938 per Breyer J: ‘ . . . a party who has not agreed to arbitrate will normally have a right to a court’s decision about the merits of its dispute (say, as here, its obligation under a contract). But, where the party has agreed to arbitrate, he or she, in effect, has relinquished much of that right’s practical value. The party still can ask a court to review the arbitrator’s decision, but the court will set that decision aside only in very unusual circumstances.’
25 This is not possible under the ICC rules although it has always been possible under our legal system: Johannes Voet 4.8.9; The Rhodesian Railways Ltd v Mackintosh 1932 AD 359 at 373; Marlin v Durban Turf Club supra.